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Capt. Hanara Tangiawha Te Ohaki (Arnold) Reedy, OBE

Also Known As: "Arnold Reedy"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Whareponga, East Coast, North Island, New Zealand
Death: April 08, 1971 (67)
Ruatōria, East Coast, North Island, New Zealand
Place of Burial: Pohatukura, Gisborne, East Coast, North Island, New Zealand
Immediate Family:

Son of John Marshall Reedy and Materoa Reedy
Husband of Ruby Tuakana White and Tuakana Ngara (Ruby) Reedy
Father of Private; Ponapatukia Reedy; Hamuera Meketu (Sam/Bulla) Reedy; Maraki Tautuhi Orongo Reedy; Hiria Te Kiekie Parata and 7 others
Brother of Aperahama Taitako Reedy; Kotuku Te Rerengatahi (George) Reedy; Manumoe Moe Oneroa; Wi Pewhairangi Reedy; Anaru Totorewa Reedy and 5 others

Occupation: Ngati Porou leader, farmer, soldier, 28th New Zealand (Maori) Battalion, Prisoner of War (POW), Sheep Farmer
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Immediate Family

About Arnold Reedy

Hanara Tangiawha Te Ohaki Reedy (commonly known as Arnold Reedy) was born on 16 August 1903 at Whareponga, a somnolent seaside village on the East Coast of the North Island. He was the eldest of 10 children of Materoa Ngarimu, an ariki of Ngati Porou, and her husband, John Marshall Reedy. Materoa’s mana was such that she often spoke for the tribe on important ceremonial occasions, a traditional duty usually reserved for men. John Reedy was the eldest son of Thomas Tyne Reedy, an Irishman who settled in Ruatoria and married Mihi Takawhenua Ngawiki Tuhou. Arnold’s hapu included Te Aitanga-a-Mate, Te Whanau-a-Rakairoa and Te Aowera. He was an Anglican and maintained strong religious beliefs throughout his life.

Arnold Reedy was scholarly by nature and possessed a sharp and enquiring mind. He attended the primary school at Whareponga and completed his secondary education at Napier Boys’ High School and Gisborne High School. He then worked for his father, a progressive farmer at Hiruharama and a successful owner and trainer of thoroughbred racehorses. It was at the presentation of the inaugural Fergusson Gold Cup at the Makaraka race track in Gisborne that Reedy was called upon to make his first speech in public.

As Reedy was growing up, he spent many long and cherished hours under the tuition and strict discipline of tribal kaumatua, from whom he learned the customs, traditions and history of Ngati Porou and the Maori people. He mastered the art of whakapapa, and could trace and recite the genealogy of many families back to their common ancestors of the migration from Hawaiki. He was regarded as an authority on waiata and moteatea (laments) and loved the rich imagery and the accurate chronicling of events that went into their composition. Some of his waiata and haka, such as ‘Taumarumaru’ and ‘Pohiritia e te Tairawhiti’, are regarded as classics and are still widely used.

On 23 December 1926, at Hiruharama, Reedy married Ruby Tuakana White, of Te Whanau-a-Ruataupare and Te Aitanga-a-Hauiti hapu. They had ten children: six daughters and four sons. During the Second World War, Reedy and his first cousin, Te Moananui-a-Kiwa (Moana) Ngarimu, served with the 28th New Zealand (Maori) Battalion. Reedy rose to the rank of captain and was captured on Crete in May 1941. He spent the next four years as a prisoner of war. During this time he learned that Moana Ngarimu had been killed in action, and of his mother’s death as the result of a motor accident.

After the war Reedy returned to farming at Hiruharama, where his increasing involvement in Maori concerns saw him accepted as a leader by Ngati Porou. Reedy was at heart a traditionalist who adhered to the principles of his cultural heritage. Like Apirana Ngata, however, he realised the importance of acquiring Pakeha skills and using them to serve the social, economic and cultural needs of his people.

He soon became involved with the New Zealand Labour Party, and his ability and sturdy independence of mind so impressed the prime minister, Peter Fraser, that in 1947 he was appointed to a number of royal commissions on Maori land grievances. The most important concerned the disposal of lands found to have been purchased illegitimately prior to 1840. Some of these surplus lands had subsequently been resold by the Crown, and the commission was to determine compensation for their original owners. The chairman, Sir Michael Myers, recommended £15,000; Reedy and the commission’s third member recommended £61,307. When this was not accepted by the government, Reedy resigned from the Labour Party. The government agreed to the larger figure in 1953, making payments to the Tainui Maori Trust Board and the Whakatohea Trust Board and establishing the Taitokerau Maori Trust Board.

Reedy’s chief sporting passion was rugby. He served as chairman of the East Coast Rugby Union for several years and was its delegate to the New Zealand Rugby Football Union. He was a member of the NZRFU Maori Advisory Board from 1949 to 1951 and was co-manager, with Ralph Love, of the New Zealand Maori team which toured New Zealand in 1952. He helped organise the match between this side and a New Zealand team in honour of the governor general, Lord Freyberg, in Wellington in July 1952. An address delivered by Reedy to the delegates of the NZRFU’s council in 1952 resulted in the inclusion of Maori representation on that body, even though many of the delegates had been instructed by their unions to vote against the proposal. Reedy declined the position in favour of his close friend, Ralph Love.

Reedy served as a member of the New Zealand delegation to the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 1949. He unsuccessfully contested the Eastern Maori seat for the New Zealand Social Credit Political League in 1957 and 1960, and for the New Zealand National Party in 1963, 1966 and 1967. He was chairman of the Horouta Tribal Executive from 1956 to 1970, a member of the New Zealand Maori Council and a member of the Tairawhiti District Maori Council. In 1953 and again in 1963 he participated in planning the Maori side of Queen Elizabeth II’s visit to New Zealand.

In the late 1960s erosion was becoming a major problem on the East Coast, and though he welcomed the advent of forestry as a potential solution, Reedy feared that in time it would engulf good arable land. He became a member of the East Cape Forestry Steering Committee and was instrumental in the establishment of what became known as the ‘Blue Line’. So called because it was coloured blue on maps, it protected arable land by restricting afforestation to specific land classifications.

Reedy’s eloquence and mastery of both the English and Maori languages marked him as one of the leading and most respected orators of his time. He became much sought after to speak at hui throughout the country. In 1962 Reedy was invited by King Koroki to welcome the governor general, Sir Bernard Fergusson, and his wife to Ngaruawahia. The elders of the Ringatu church invited him to be a speaker at their centennial celebrations in July 1968. In 1969 he was unanimously selected by the Tairawhiti District Maori Council to be spokesman for the Maori people at the official function for the James Cook bicentenary celebrations in Gisborne.

During his declining years Reedy loved nothing better than to impart the knowledge he had gained to aspiring Ngati Porou leaders. Numbered among these young men were Koro Dewes, Apirana Mahuika and Reedy’s nephew Tamati Reedy.

In 1969 Reedy was made an OBE for the significant contribution he had made to his community, to Ngati Porou and to Maoridom. After a prolonged illness he died in Gisborne on 8 April 1971, survived by his wife and children. He was taken home to Hiruharama, where he is buried at his family cemetery Turangarahui, a windswept knoll overlooking the flats that are still farmed by the Reedy whanau.

Source: Biography by Maraki Tautuhi Orongo Reedy and Miria Hine Tapu Te Ariki Walker (Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, Volume 5, 2000) http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/5r10/reedy-hanara-tangiawha...

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Arnold Reedy's Timeline

1903
August 16, 1903
Whareponga, East Coast, North Island, New Zealand
1925
1925
Hiruharama, Auckland, New Zealand
1927
1927
Waipiro Bay East Coast New Zealand
1932
1932
1934
July 7, 1934
1941
June 9, 1941
1971
April 8, 1971
Age 67
Ruatōria, East Coast, North Island, New Zealand